Emma is a divorced woman with a teen aged boy who moves into a small town and tries to make a go of a horse ranch. Murphey is the town druggist who steers business her way. Things are going along predictably until her ex husband shows up, needing a place to stay. The three of them form an intricate circle, Emma’s son liking Murphey, but desperately wanting his father back. —IMDb
American film director Martin Ritt started out as a Broadway actor. Ritt’s stage role as “Gleason” in Winged Victory brought him to Hollywood for the film version, for which the studio publicity billed him, along with the rest of the male cast, by the rank he held in the Army (Private First Class Martin Ritt). A victim of the Hollywood blacklist, Ritt’s career came to a standstill in the early 1950s. He reemerged, not as an actor, but as a director for the 1956 film Edge of the City. A favorite of actor Paul Newman, Ritt directed Newman in The Long Hot Summer (1958), Paris Blues (1961), Hemingway’s Adventures of a Young Man (1962), Hud (1963), The Outrage (1964) and Hombre (1967). Other Ritt-directed films of note were Pete ‘n’ Tillie (1972), Cross Creek (1984), Murphy’s Romance (1985), and, his last film, Stanley and Iris (1990). If there doesn’t seem to be a central throughline in these films it was because Ritt steadfastly refused to be typecast as a director. One project that brought… read more
an enjoyable 7/10 my review: http://lasttimeisawdotcom.wordpress.com/2012/03/31/last-film-i-saw-murphys-romance/
Title: Murphy’s Romance
Year: 1985
Language: English
Country: USA
Genre: Comedy, Drama
Director: Martin Ritt
Writers:
Max Schott
Harriet Frank Jr.
Irving Ravetch… read review
I have a rancher friend who is 73 and romancing a 24 year old. When pressed, he will admit to being 55, but mostly he will avoid the subject. Murphy Jones (played by the ever reliable James Garner… read review